A familiar example is 1-dimensional polyacetylene (1). As is generally the case in one dimension, there are two Dirac points for polyactylene. Therefore a Dirac description of electron motion near each Dirac point is possible. A distortion of the underlying lattice (Peierls' instability) perturbes the electron motion in a way that couples the two Dirac points and opens a gap in the energy spectrum. In the Dirac equation description this is achieved by coupling the Dirac field to a scalar field
, which is a measure of the lattice distortion.
enjoys a
symmetry with two ground states in which it takes homogenous values
. This coupling leads to a Dirac mass
. But
can also take a position-dependent kink profile (soliton)
that interpolates between the two vacua
. This ``twisting" of the mass parameter describes a defect in the lattice distortion. The Dirac equation with the kink profile
replacing the homogenous mass
possesses a single mid-gap (zero-energy) eigenstate. This gives rise to fractional fermion number for the electrons: 1/2 per spin degree of freedom (1).
Recently a similar story has been told by C.-Y. Hou, A. Chamon and C. Mudry (2) (HCM) about (monolayer) graphene. This is a 2-dimensional array of carbon atoms formed from a superposition of two triangular sublattices, A and B.
The generators of lattice A are
When no lattice distortion is considered, the tight-binding Hamiltonian, with uniform hopping constant , is taken as
is diagonal in momentum space
is linearized around the two Dirac points,
, and supplemented by a term arising from a (Kulé) distortion of the lattice; this couples the two Fermi points.
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(5) |
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To find zero modes for this system HCM promote the mixing parameter
to an inhomogenous complex function
with a profile like the scalar field in the Nielsen-Olesen-Landau-Ginsburg-Abrikosor vortex. To this end the Hamiltonian (5) is presented in coordinate spaces as
HCM take
in the
-vortex form:
where n is an integer,
vanishes as
for small
, and approaches the mass-generating value
at large
. They then establish the occurrence of
zero modes, i.e. solutions to
, on lattice A (B) for negative (positive)
, and they construct explicitly the solutions for
. Therefore Fermion number
is fractionalized.